Walter Scheib has quite a story to tell. In fact, he has two stories to tell. The first involves the rise of an American chef to the most storied position in the land.

The second offers an intimate, human view of two first families, the corridors of political power, international personalities, and the most famous building in the United States, told from a unique vantage point -- the White House kitchen.

Scheib will speak in North Platte at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday, April 4 downtown at the Neville Center for Performing Arts -- the old Fox Theater.

In April 1994, after a lengthy application and screening, Walter Scheib became the chef to America’s chief executive and the first family.

First Lady Hillary Clinton, impressed by the comprehensive spa menu Scheib had developed for the Greenbrier resort, as well as his American cuisine highlights, personally hired Scheib.

For 11 years, he prepared everything from simple family meals to elaborate and formal State dinners. His culinary creations dazzled and delighted White House guests including Nelson Mandela, Emperor Aikihito, Jacques Chirac, Boris Yeltsin, Vaclav Havel, Lady Diana Spencer, Tony Blair, Vicente Fox and others, not to mention the thousands of congressional members, journalists, and other White House visitors who got to know his food.

Admission to Scheib's lecture is by membership in the Town Hall Lecture series. For inquiries about membership, please contact Betty Guynan at (308) 530-8448 or Doris Wells at (308) 532-4550.

He speaks with eloquence and pride about America’s bounty today, praising the artisan cheese makers, green grocers, mushroom foragers, master bread makers, fishermen, ranchers, and farmers who have helped our national market basket evolve and make quality cooking more accessible than ever.

“America is rich in amazing produce, meats, and fish,” Scheib says. “Using just a few excellent ingredients, anyone can make a perfect meal with very little formal training.”

Since he returned to private life, Scheib has founded The American Chef™, the company through which he shares his knowledge of the development of American cuisine at the White House, as well as White House remembrances, with audiences across the country.

His special events often aim to bring together business leaders using group cooking as a method of team bonding.

They also offer home entertainers and party planners unique approaches to special events. For cooking schools, cooking demonstrations and lectures, Scheib teaches classes ranging from State dinner secrets to throwing a White House birthday party.

The American Chef™ offers a multitude of special-event concepts such as White House style cocktail receptions, First Lady Luncheons, State Dinners, and Outdoor “South Lawn” barbecues and picnics. His educational and entertaining sessions and demonstrations are filled with White House anecdotes, culinary insights, team building and bonding, as well as exercises with a culinary twist.

Scheib discovered his mother’s pots and pans early in life and soon felt comfortable preparing meals for parents and friends. By the time he graduated from high school, he was eager to pursue a profession in the culinary arts. He attended the Culinary Institute of America, from which he graduated with high honors in 1979.

Immediately thereafter, Scheib started as a rounds cook at a premier Washington, D.C. hotel, and within three years was promoted to executive chef. Before coming to the Greenbrier and then the White House, he served as Executive Chef at other major hotels and resorts such as the Boca Raton Resort and Club.

Scheib has developed interesting, informative and often humorous anecdotes from his years in the White House.

On the CBS Early Show, he demonstrated how to make a “presidential burger”…on the Fourth of July.

Additional television appearances include The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, the CBS Early Show, Good Morning America, Weekend Today in New York, Nightline and Iron Chef on the Food Network Station. Newspaper and Magazine stories and interviews about his company and his food have been seen in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Philadelphia Inquirer and The U.S. News and World Report, in addition to other articles. Please visit the americanchef.com for the full text of these articles.

He is the co-author of White House Chef: Eleven Years, Two Presidents, One Kitchen, which was released in January 2007.